Give your wooden floors in Bank a fresh look
A now everyday, but then pioneering, public facility, was built in the forecourt of the Royal Exchange in 1855... Your traditional wooden floors may also be seen as everyday - but with their beauty, practicality and longevity, they deserve respectful treatment. So when damaged and worn - or simply shabby and tired.. Call upon the right company to give them a makeover! Here we are. The Bank Floor Sanding Specialists. With.. sanding that is 99% dust free: from a unique collection system the complete floor repair and restoration service: for all kinds of floors - from solid/engineered boards to parquet blocks whatever your floor requires: repairs to damaged timber replacement with matching or reclaimed material sanding way old paint and sealant staining for a change of colour resealing with the fresh protection of oil, hardwax or lacquer. All with the highest quality floor restoration materials and supreme level of workmanship. So get the best advice for your floors - at the office, shop, bar or public building.. Call us today for your free assessment The Bank Floor Sanding Specialists
TRUSTED BY THESE WELL KNOWN BRANDS AND HUNDREDS MORE. |
The BANK Floor Sanding Masters
The nuns were a Benedictine order from 1212 who gained a reputation for a somewhat risqué approach to their calling. They were reproved in 1385 for ‘the number of little dogs kept by the prioress, kissing secular persons and wearing ostentatious veils’. The prioress was ordered to shed her collection of ‘small houndes and be content with one or two’ as these pooches were eating up food reserved for the poor of the parish. By 1432, these flaky nuns (mostly widows and daughters of city merchants) were again admonished for giving eyes to young men in the congregation. The abolition of the monasteries in the 1530s finally brought a stop to their nonsense. Today, the church retains its flat timber roofs and many quality 17th century wooden features: canopied pulpit, doorcases, newel stair turret - and some impressive painted monuments. |
>